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Important Factors To Consider When Interpreting Your Survey's Data
Your survey data is only as valuable as your ability to interpret it accurately. The most insightful responses can be rendered useless (or worse, misleading) if your analysis is poor. It's worth noting that poor analysis is not limited to a lack of analytical skills on the part of the surveyor or her team. It can be due to unclear objectives, poor design and question choice, and uneven representation within the population. Each of these can damage the integrity of the responses. This article will provide a short list of key factors to consider when interpreting and analyzing your survey results. I'll describe a few traps that ensnare novice surveyors. I'll also explain why your results need to be cleaned prior to interpreting them. Valid Responses Cannot Save A Bad Design One of the most common mistakes made by beginning surveyors involves using poorly-designed questions. Even if respondents' answers are entirely valid, the results might be useless given your needs. For example, suppose your company wants to find out the median annual income of your website visitors. However, rather than letting respondents fill in the amount of their annual income, you provide a scale of one of five options: $25,000, $35,000, $50,000, $75,000, and $100,000. Even if every respondent within your population offers a valid answer, it is practically impossible to derive an accurate median figure. The problem here is not with the data. Nor is the problem with the surveyor's analytical skills. The problem is in the design; the data cannot be interpreted according to your objective (identifying the median income). Limiting Potential Misrepresentation Another problem that will prevent you from interpreting your survey results accurately involves a skewed representation within the population. Making matters worse, the problem often goes unnoticed, which causes the responses to be misleading. For example, suppose you are surveying your entire customer base. Customers are evenly distributed across multiple product classes, so you expect an even representation. But, what happens if response rates within those product classes are wildly different? That will skew the results. The larger the variance in response rates, the bigger the problem. The issue is exacerbated if you and your team fail to identify the skewed representation in your survey responses. Any action taken on those skewed responses can have a negative impact on your business. Cleaning Your Results You will need to clean your pool of responses before interpreting and analyzing it. In some cases, respondents will fail to complete enough of a questionnaire to make any of their answers meaningful. You should discard all of their answers. In other cases, there will be duplicate answers. Those too, should be discarded. If you're including open-ended questions in your survey, you should create a formula for categorizing responses based on thematic elements. Answers to these types of questions often provide the most insight, but they can be challenging to interpret. Categorizing them makes interpreting them easier. Digging Beneath The Surface Once you have designed your survey with the right questions, eliminated skewed representation, and cleaned your results, it's finally time to analyze and interpret the data. Depending on the type of analysis you need to perform, there are software applications that can help. Keep in mind those applications will be all but useless when interpreting answers to open-ended questions. The key is to have a clearly-defined goal with regard to the information you're trying to derive from your population's responses. Otherwise, you might choose an inappropriate method for analysis. Mistakes made at this point can lead to disastrous results in terms of cost, time, and misguided effort. Whether you use frequency tables, cross tabulation, or regression analysis, your ability to accurately interpret your survey responses hinges upon the method you choose.
About the Author SurveyGizmo is a leading provider of customer survey software, for more great ways to use surveys to enhance your business check them out online at http://www.SurveyGizmo.com
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